CIA Operatives Have Been on the Ground in Libya for Weeks

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The CIA has placed covert operatives on the ground in Libya to gather intelligence for air strikes and reach out to rebels fighting Muammar Qaddafi’s loyalists. Yesterday Reuters reported that President Obama had signed a secret order called a “finding” — the first step in authorizing a clandestine CIA mission. But officials now say it’s been underway for weeks. When Obama first addressed the country about enforcing the U.N. resolution a little under two weeks ago, one of the parameters for U.S. involvement was no ground troops. Even as the coalition moved under NATO’s leadership, Obama has insisted that the U.S. military will not deploy ground troops to Libya. Nonetheless, small groups of CIA operatives have been communicating and vetting rebels for weeks, “as part of a shadow force of Westerners that the Obama administration hopes can help bleed Colonel Qaddafi’s military,” officials told the New York Times. The apparently not-so-secret finding was signed earlier thismonth.

Beyond the CIA presence, officials say the agency has been building a network of informants to support the coalition and help the U.S. assess the rebels. A number of American informants who worked at the agency’s station in Tripoli, recent American arrivals, dozens of British special forces, and MI6 intelligence officers are working inside Libya. American officers have been trying to determine the location of Qaddafi’s munitions depots and locate clusters of Qaddafi loyalists to figure out what communications and possibly weapons support is needed, as well as weaken Qaddafi’s military to spurdefections.

Officials cautioned that Western operatives aren’t directing rebel forces, but meeting with them to understand who the rebel leaders are and the opposition’s allegiances on the ground. The Dish’s Andrew Sullivan, an Obama stalwart, broke ranks to criticize the strategy:

Meanwhile, Nicolas Sarkozy, who has encouraged aggressive response to the conflict, is being celebrated as the most popular man in Libya with French flags flying in Benghazi, a rebel stronghold. A sociologist inside the country writing from the blog Revolutionology reports shouts of: